Florida Judge Voids Entire Health Care Law

A federal district court judge in Florida ruled today that a key provision in the new health care law is unconstitutional, and that the entire law must be voided.

Roger Vinson, a Ronald Reagan appointee, agreed with the 26 state-government plaintiffs that Congress exceeded its authority by passing a law penalizing individuals who do not have health insurance.

“I must reluctantly conclude that Congress exceeded the bounds of its authority in passing the Act with the individual mandate,” Vinson writes. “Because the individual mandate is unconstitutional and not severable, the entire Act must be declared void.”

[Emphasis added]Here’s a primer on why the Democrats’ failure to include a severability clause in the legislation opened the entire package up to being stricken by the court. You can read the entire ruling below.

By determining the entire law must be wiped out, Vinson went farther than a different Republican-appointed judge in Virginia who declared the mandate unconstitutional late last year. The Obama administration has appealed the Virginia ruling, and is expected to appeal this one.

Vinson declined to enjoin the law, however, and that means implementation in the 26 states will continue pending higher-court rulings.

The question, as the plaintiffs framed it, is whether Congress can require citizens to purchase a product — health insurance — under its powers to regulate interstate commerce. Conservatives — who originally conceived of and supported the individual insurance mandate — have argued in numerous lawsuits that the government doesn’t have the power, as they put it, to “regulate inactivity.”

Before Democrats passed the health care law, legal experts across the spectrum largely held that a Constitutional challenge was futile. But in the intervening months, the question of the mandate has exposed a partisan rift on the federal bench.